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  • During the COVID crisis, we  invested around $2 billion,  

  • and we've completed our pandemic facilityand that's what's doubled our capacity.

  • Adar Poonawalla is the CEO of Serum Institute of  India, the world's largest vaccine manufacturer.

  • We produced 1.9 billion doses in just 2021  after having committed only a billion doses,  

  • so we did double of what we had committed.

  • The company was established in 1966  after horse breeder Cyrus Poonawalla  

  • began to extract serum from his retired animals.

  • Controlling the extraction of serum, which  is used to create vaccines for diseases  

  • like tetanus and scarlet fever, allowed  him to produce cheaper vaccines locally.

  • In our country, we were dependent on  foreign medicines and drugs and vaccines;  

  • they were very expensive.

  • And he saw that as an opportunity.

  • But the company's entry into the local  market wasn't entirely smooth sailing.

  • In those days, getting permissions  and licenses was a huge hurdle.

  • My father, he had no track record, no  brand name, people didn't know him.

  • Even talent at that time, trained scientists, 40  years ago, 50 years ago was in a huge shortage.

  • Today, the Serum Institute's sprawling campus  spans 42 acres, or around 25 soccer fields,  

  • in the western Indian city of Pune, a  far cry from the early days when Cyrus  

  • operated out of a small laboratory  in the corner of his stud farm.

  • In the future, if there is another  pandemic or major outbreaks,  

  • we can rapidly produce a lot of  vaccine doses in three months,  

  • a billion doses across different technologiesviral vector vaccines, messenger RNA vaccines.

  • So how exactly did the Serum  Institute of India grow into  

  • the world's largest vaccine manufacturer?

  • There were criticisms at the start of the pandemic  

  • that vaccine manufacturers were profiteering  from the pandemic, and the Serum Institute,  

  • fully owned by the Poonawalla familywasn't immune from the backlash.

  • It was far easier to get intocompared to listed entities and  

  • others who have accountability to  their stakeholders and shareholders.

  • For me, it was easier to make a vaccine $3  and offer it at a very affordable price,  

  • for example, compared to others  who have to charge higher prices.

  • And they made billions of dollars in profitsand I think they had every right to do so.

  • I think it was a fine line between profiteering  

  • and making a profit. It's important to  have that distinction between the two.

  • There will always be criticism, you knowwhy did someone charge so much or whatever,  

  • but, you know, you have different cost points.

  • We could have charged higher  prices also. But we didn't.

  • We didn't want to sort of take  advantage beyond the point.

  • We just wanted to make a product  which is as accessible and affordable.

  • Even before the pandemic, the Serum Institute made  a name for itself with its affordable vaccines.

  • The tetanus vaccine was the  company's first product in 1967.

  • This was followed by antidotes for snake bitestuberculosis, measles, polio and the flu.

  • A breakthrough came in the mid-1980s  after it was accredited by the  

  • World Health Organization to supply  vaccines to United Nations agencies.

  • With the WHO prequalifying and approving  you, that was an opening up of sorts,  

  • for us as an opportunity to  go to all these countries.

  • Towards the end of the 20th century,  

  • the Serum Institute was the world's  largest producer of the measles vaccine,  

  • and more than half of the world's children  were vaccinated with at least one of its shots.

  • In 2012, the business expanded its  vaccine portfolio and manufacturing  

  • prowess with its first international  acquisition in the Netherlands.

  • By then, it was the world's fifth-largest  vaccines maker by volume, and it became  

  • the market leader a few years lateraccounting for 28% of global volume in 2019.

  • But the pandemic presented several  challenges for the quickly growing company.

  • Several factors led to delays in Serum  Institute of India's production pledges,  

  • including a fire at its Pune facility.

  • As a deadly second wave of the pandemic  swept through India in March of 2021,  

  • the government restricted  its Covid-19 vaccine exports,  

  • and the Serum Institute was blamed  for the global vaccine shortage.

  • The crisis abated as the Serum Institute ramped  up its production capacity in the months ahead.

  • But for Adar, the flak he  received convinced him that this,  

  • and any subsequent health crises, cannot be  solved by the pharmaceutical companies alone.

  • Perhaps I'm being naive, where I'm expecting  countries and leaders to come forward to sign  

  • a sort of treaty, which would at least compel them  to politically explain to their constituents why  

  • it is so important to share raw materials, vaccine  doses, have a harmonized regulatory platform.

  • It's more of a political commitment like  you've done on climate change and other areas.

  • While the pandemic may have been  Adar's biggest challenge as chief  

  • executive officer of the company, he had  two decades of experience to lean on.

  • Even though his father founded the company, Adar  wasn't handed the top role on a silver platter.

  • In his first decade at the company,  

  • Adar worked in numerous departments before  finally taking over the reins as CEO in 2011.

  • When I joined also 22 years ago, getting  access to capital was a major challenge.

  • I worked in every department and  particularly in marketing and sales  

  • and in exports because I wanted to  build the exports. And the company  

  • at that time was perhaps in 20 to 30  countries. Today, we're in 172 countries.

  • Fortunately, one of Adar's priorities as CEO was  to boost its vaccine manufacturing capabilities.

  • As CEO, I concentrated more on the  science and the manufacturing part  

  • I was able to understand where  the global demand was going.

  • That gave me the confidence to really  invest in capacity ahead of demand.

  • Adar says working his way up also allowed  him to refine his leadership style.

  • Initially, I think I was a sort of micromanager. I  

  • wanted to do everything myself,  I still do to a certain extent.

  • But when I realized that it wasn't  possible to grow beyond a certain point,  

  • including having multiple facilities globally,  I sort of changed my style to being more of a  

  • delegator and getting people that I could trust  to make decisions was challenging initially.

  • Decentralizing decision-making was key  if we were to expand in all these areas.

  • As the demand for Covid vaccines wanes,  

  • Adar has set his sights on growing the  company beyond its traditional markets.

  • We've been in these 170 countries,  

  • South America, the developing world  countries, African continent, Asia.

  • I'm looking at now expanding more with  

  • my portfolio of vaccines in  Europe and the United States.

  • This includes partnerships with pharmaceutical  and biotechnology companies, such as Britain and  

  • Sweden's AstraZeneca, America's Novavaxand South Africa's Aspen Pharmacare.

  • For the first time, the African continent  will set up a manufacturing site.

  • So they have their own vaccines  in the case of a pandemic,  

  • and they don't have to rely  so much on other countries.

  • Before the pandemic, the WHO estimated  the global market value of vaccines was  

  • worth around $33 billion, or just 2%  of the overall pharmaceutical market.

  • And global consulting firm PwC says  vaccine demand will remain high as  

  • Covid-19 becomes endemic and new variants emerge.

  • We are looking at expanding our vaccine  portfolio including in the messenger RNA space.

  • We're building a capacity specifically  for handling these new technologies.

  • We have a partnership with the Greenlight, a U.S.  firm, which has got this technology platform, and  

  • we'll look at some of the new vaccines that might  be needed to be developed with that technology.

  • Adar says he's also been thinking proactively  about the global supply chain crisis.

  • We've made small acquisitions  

  • to strengthen our supply chain. We haven't been  importing a lot from China at all, in fact.

  • We import a lot of our raw materials from  Europe and the U.S. We're developing in India,  

  • suppliers who can now substitute what we're  importing from other parts of the world.

  • These acquisitions include a 50% stake in the  local subsidiary of German specialty glass  

  • maker Schott to better manage its supplies of  packaging products such as vials and syringes.

  • I'm quite frankly quite relieved that the  COVID pandemic is nearing the end because  

  • I can get back to vaccines in my pipeline that  I had been developing for the last few years.

  • Like HPV, malaria and some  other meningitis vaccines.

During the COVID crisis, we  invested around $2 billion,  

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